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El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
You can't add recurring numbers up like that. Imagine adding these three numbers:owheelj wrote:No, 0.9 recurring does actually equal 1.
1/3 + 1/3 + 1/3 = 1
1/3= 0.3 recurring
0.3 recurring + 0.3 recurring + 0.3 recurring = 0.9 recurring.
Therefore 0.9 recurring = 1.
Maths isn't it a matter of opinions. If you can show something to be the case with in the system of mathematics then it is the case, no matter how counter-intuitive.
El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
I know this because I was taught it by my maths teacher in high school. Only non-mathematicians ever claim that it doesn't.This equality has long been accepted by professional mathematicians and taught in textbooks.
I studied this sometime in 1st or 2nd or 3rd or 4th year university (it was so long ago!). I was in Applied Math with Computer Science (an honours mathematics program) at the University of Waterloo - one of the top mathematics universities in the world. No offense, but your math teacher probably couldn't have got in the front door.owheelj wrote:You are wrong. Mathematicians accept completely that 0.9 recurring is equal to 1.
From the wikipedia link;
I know this because I was taught it by my maths teacher in high school. Only non-mathematicians ever claim that it doesn't.This equality has long been accepted by professional mathematicians and taught in textbooks.
Think right to left. They might not teach it this way anymore, but we used to add the right-most digit first, carry over anything over 9, then do the next digit, etc.. Your first digit on the right (however far you'd want to go) would equal 10, not 9.999recurring. It's okay man, I think the motivation behind this "agreeing that 0.999recurring equals 1" is that mathematicians want to solve math problems, not discuss philosophy. But the top minds know. The difference is not significant in any practical application, so they make it easy so we can all agree and move on. Even if we know the truth.owheelj wrote:Also if you correctly add up 0.3 recurring x 3 then you would never round over that last digit. You would just keep adding up the digits forever because they are number that go on forever. Rounding up that last digit can only happen with non recurring numbers that give you a point to stop adding 3+3+3.
El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
Skepticism in education
Students of mathematics often reject the equality of 0.999… and 1, for reasons ranging from their disparate appearance to deep misgivings over the limit concept and disagreements over the nature of infinitesimals. There are many common contributing factors to the confusion:
Students are often "mentally committed to the notion that a number can be represented in one and only one way by a decimal." Seeing two manifestly different decimals representing the same number appears to be a paradox, which is amplified by the appearance of the seemingly well-understood number 1.[33]
Some students interpret "0.999…" (or similar notation) as a large but finite string of 9s, possibly with a variable, unspecified length. If they accept an infinite string of nines, they may still expect a last 9 "at infinity".[34]
Intuition and ambiguous teaching lead students to think of the limit of a sequence as a kind of infinite process rather than a fixed value, since a sequence need not reach its limit. Where students accept the difference between a sequence of numbers and its limit, they might read "0.999…" as meaning the sequence rather than its limit.[35]
Some students regard 0.999… as having a fixed value which is less than 1 by an infinitesimal but non-zero amount.
Some students believe that the value of a convergent series is at best an approximation, that .
These ideas are mistaken in the context of the standard real numbers, although some may be valid in other number systems, either invented for their general mathematical utility or as instructive counterexamples to better understand 0.999….
Many of these explanations were found by professor David O. Tall, who has studied characteristics of teaching and cognition that lead to some of the misunderstandings he has encountered in his college students. Interviewing his students to determine why the vast majority initially rejected the equality, he found that "students continued to conceive of 0.999… as a sequence of numbers getting closer and closer to 1 and not a fixed value, because 'you haven’t specified how many places there are' or 'it is the nearest possible decimal below 1'".[36]
Of the elementary proofs, multiplying 0.333… = 1⁄3 by 3 is apparently a successful strategy for convincing reluctant students that 0.999… = 1. Still, when confronted with the conflict between their belief of the first equation and their disbelief of the second, some students either begin to disbelieve the first equation or simply become frustrated.[37] Nor are more sophisticated methods foolproof: students who are fully capable of applying rigorous definitions may still fall back on intuitive images when they are surprised by a result in advanced mathematics, including 0.999…. For example, one real analysis student was able to prove that 0.333… = 1⁄3 using a supremum definition, but then insisted that 0.999… < 1 based on her earlier understanding of long division.[38] Others still are able to prove that 1⁄3 = 0.333…, but, upon being confronted by the fractional proof, insist that "logic" supersedes the mathematical calculations.
Joseph Mazur tells the tale of an otherwise brilliant calculus student of his who "challenged almost everything I said in class but never questioned his calculator," and who had come to believe that nine digits are all one needs to do mathematics, including calculating the square root of 23. The student remained uncomfortable with a limiting argument that 9.99… = 10, calling it a "wildly imagined infinite growing process."[39]
As part of Ed Dubinsky's "APOS theory" of mathematical learning, Dubinsky and his collaborators (2005) propose that students who conceive of 0.999… as a finite, indeterminate string with an infinitely small distance from 1 have "not yet constructed a complete process conception of the infinite decimal". Other students who have a complete process conception of 0.999… may not yet be able to "encapsulate" that process into an "object conception", like the object conception they have of 1, and so they view the process 0.999… and the object 1 as incompatible. Dubinsky et al. also link this mental ability of encapsulation to viewing 1⁄3 as a number in its own right and to dealing with the set of natural numbers as a whole.[40]
El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
There have been proofs of this for well over 200 years, probably a lot longer.If the current mathematical community has decided that this argument needed to be settled with a simple explanation so students can move on a learn new things, so be it.
lmaoTheProwler wrote:Hey, you talked about your math teacher. I tried to give you some insight about the level of my teachers.
You can quote wikipedia all you want. If the current mathematical community has decided that this argument needed to be settled with a simple explanation so students can move on a learn new things, so be it.
I understand that this may be difficult to grasp. But when you are talking about adding 3+3+3, you are missing a key element. Look at my first explanation again. If you were to write out a thousand 3's, or a million 3's, or a billion 3's, your first addition on the far right would still be 3.333recurring+3.333recurring+3.333recurring which does not equal 9 (as you mistakenly are stating). It equals 10. And that means you have to carry the one. And so on and so on and so on.
You are missing the idea that you are trying to explain theoretical numbers with real numbers. At some point, you are adding up 3 theoretical numbers, not 3 real numbers. Or, you could even do better than that. At some point you can add up three real numbers: 3 1/3 + 3 1/3 + 3 1/3 which equals 10. And that means you have to carry the one. And so on and so on and so on.
You can read this if you want to read some opinions of thinkers, not just repeaters:
http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/archive/ ... 39461.html
There aren't any, but that's only because the athiests running academia want you to think that they're the same, in an attempt to disprove logic and God. Fortunately, us non-sheeple see it for the lie it is.SultanOfSurreal wrote:lmaoTheProwler wrote:Hey, you talked about your math teacher. I tried to give you some insight about the level of my teachers.
You can quote wikipedia all you want. If the current mathematical community has decided that this argument needed to be settled with a simple explanation so students can move on a learn new things, so be it.
I understand that this may be difficult to grasp. But when you are talking about adding 3+3+3, you are missing a key element. Look at my first explanation again. If you were to write out a thousand 3's, or a million 3's, or a billion 3's, your first addition on the far right would still be 3.333recurring+3.333recurring+3.333recurring which does not equal 9 (as you mistakenly are stating). It equals 10. And that means you have to carry the one. And so on and so on and so on.
You are missing the idea that you are trying to explain theoretical numbers with real numbers. At some point, you are adding up 3 theoretical numbers, not 3 real numbers. Or, you could even do better than that. At some point you can add up three real numbers: 3 1/3 + 3 1/3 + 3 1/3 which equals 10. And that means you have to carry the one. And so on and so on and so on.
You can read this if you want to read some opinions of thinkers, not just repeaters:
http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/archive/ ... 39461.html
ok, your "i am such a brilliant mathematical expert, i can only understand addition in terms of how arithmetic is taught to first graders" argument aside, please show me a single real scholar who claims .999... is not 1
how does jimbo wales' cock taste you doughy ass rainbow flag flying nerdInkL0sed wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999...
prowler wrote:I studied this sometime in 1st or 2nd or 3rd or 4th year university (it was so long ago!). I was in Applied Math with Computer Science (an honours mathematics program) at the University of Waterloo - one of the top mathematics universities in the world.
I enjoyed that.owheelj wrote: I was once ranked in the top 99.97% of maths students in Australia (in my year group). I was doing university maths when I was in 13. I don't know about my maths teacher, but I think I could have got in to your little university.
It's not round up, .999 recurring is 1.AAFitz wrote:prowler wrote:I studied this sometime in 1st or 2nd or 3rd or 4th year university (it was so long ago!). I was in Applied Math with Computer Science (an honours mathematics program) at the University of Waterloo - one of the top mathematics universities in the world.I enjoyed that.owheelj wrote: I was once ranked in the top 99.97% of maths students in Australia (in my year group). I was doing university maths when I was in 13. I don't know about my maths teacher, but I think I could have got in to your little university.
Now, I have some university math, but I dont enjoy it. However, it seems to me that arguing that .999recuring not equaling one, is as useful as arguing that 1 does not equal 1. It is true on a basic level at times, but not extremely practical.
However, in 10,000 years, if we have matter transportation capability, and my starship is 500000000000000000000000000.999recurring miles away, and you have to beam me onto it, I do hope you dont just round up, and fuse me into the hull. (though at some point you have to stop the computation, otherwise the number will never be displayed, so it cant be used in the equation, since 9's will continue to be added to it forever.)

I was once ranked in the top 99.99999999999999% of students in my high school.owheelj wrote: I was once ranked in the top 99.97% of maths students in Australia (in my year group). I was doing university maths when I was in 13. I don't know about my maths teacher, but I think I could have got in to your little university.
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